Pour Aioli sauce in a dish (for dipping). Lay crab fingers out on the platter or in the pottle. Sprinkle with lemon juice. Dip crab fingers into the sauce.
Beer or white wine could make a match.
Pour Aioli sauce in a dish (for dipping). Lay crab fingers out on the platter or in the pottle. Sprinkle with lemon juice. Dip crab fingers into the sauce.
Beer or white wine could make a match.
Cook garlic and saffron slowly (Confit *) at a low temperature of up to 90OC in oil. Put two garlic cloves aside, you will need them later to bring out garlic flavor.
Whip garlic cooked in a (Confit *) mode with saffron oil and other two garlic cloves.
Mash egg yolks over a bain-marie in a deep bowl for 8–10 minutes.Add lemon juice, white wine vinegar and white wine. Whip again.
Pour the mix of oil, garlic and saffron as a thin trickle into the mix of yolks and spices, whip until smooth. The cooking process is similar to mayonnaise making.
Confit is a perfect way of keeping your products healthy. While cooking, your food uses its own fat and grease. Learning a Confit method is a crucial step in the cooking art. If you master it, you can move further on to explore more complicated and sophisticated cooking practices. In this case, we use oil to cook garlic.
Aioli is garlic sauce that you can often meet at French restaurants. This sauce goes perfect with fish and is very popular in France. It matches with fish or seafood. It also traditionally pairs with vegetables. French chefs could go mad if they learn I use saffron with it, but it is was still worth doing so.
Take a merus section, boil it (find the recipe of snow crab broth). Cut it carefully and get the meat out.
Bread the meat in three layers of crumbs. You will need flour, egg and milk, Panko with seeds.
Lay everything on the tray and let it cool in the fridge.
Fry right before serving. Fry at 180OC, 3–5 minutes, until golden brown.
Use a napkin to clean off oil. Sprinkle with sea salt.
Mix all ingredients
Store at room temperature of 22-25OC not longer than 30 days in closed containers
Panko is the name for Japanese bread crumbs used as a coating. Panko is produced in Japan, and other countries of South-East Asia. Panko is flaky bread crumbs that become thin, crispy and almost intangible. Panko goes well with fish, meat and reptiles. You may as well get Panko dried on the pan and sprinkle it on any type of salad.